Abstract

The development of executive function is necessary for flexible and voluntary control of behavior. Deficits in executive function are purported to be a primary cause of behavioral inflexibility—a core clinical symptom—in Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). Attentional set-shifting has traditionally been measured with the Dimensional Change Card Sort, however, this task requires following verbal instructions. Here, we used a novel visual search task that does not require verbal instructions in conjunction with eye-tracking to test attentional set-shifting in 2-year-old toddlers diagnosed with ASD (N = 29) and chronological age-matched typically developing controls (N = 30). On each trial, a relevant and an irrelevant target were embedded in a set of feature-conjunction distractors, and toddlers were tasked with searching for the relevant target. Critically, after a set of trials the targets switched roles (i.e., the previously relevant target became irrelevant, and the previously relevant target became irrelevant). We measured visual search performance prior to and following a target switch. We found that both groups of toddlers could readily switch targets, and found strikingly similar performance between typically developing toddlers and toddlers with ASD. Our results challenge the centrality of deficits in attentional set-shifting to early behavioral inflexibility in ASD.

Highlights

  • Executive function (EF) is a set of related, higher-order cognitive skills that enable an individual to shift from one mental set to another, suppress a dominant response, and actively maintain and manipulate mental information [1]

  • There was no difference between the two groups in TR hit rate (ASD TR: M = 85.06%, SE = 3.76%; TD TR: M = 90.00%, SE = 3.69%; p = 0.35, d = 0.245), but hit rates to the Average Distractor were significantly lower in toddlers with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)

  • In this study we employed a novel, nonverbal eye-tracking visual search paradigm to test attentional set-shifting in 2-year-old toddlers with and without a diagnosis of ASD

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Summary

Introduction

Executive function (EF) is a set of related, higher-order cognitive skills that enable an individual to shift from one mental set to another (set-shifting), suppress a dominant response (inhibitory control), and actively maintain and manipulate mental information (working memory) [1]. EF is considered essential for voluntary and flexible control of thoughts and behavior, and robust EF in childhood is predictive of a range of positive cognitive and socio-emotional outcomes later in life [2]. In typical development, (TD), EF emerges progressively during early childhood, with simpler EF skills emerging prior to more complex ones [3,4,5]. By the end of the first year of life, infants can successfully maintain a mental representation of a hidden object and inhibit a tendency to search for that object at previous hiding location [6]. On standard versions of the Dimensional Change Card Sort (DCCS) [7]

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